You've been saying "I'll do it tomorrow" about a lot of things. Don't let the OmoeKOH application be one of them. May 5 is the cutoff.
Click here to apply https://t.co/BTHqTwq0NK
#omoheKOH#wealthandimpactsummit26
This is the One stage you want to be climb. With 1,000 seats and a chance at ₦200M up for grabs.
Send in your applications before 12AM to grab your grand opportunity.
#OmoeKOH#WealthAndImpactSummit26
Some applications will still be coming in until 12AM tonight.
It’ll be sad to be the one who missed out because of a delay.
#OmoeKOH#wealthandimpactsummit26
The money is real and the stage is real. The only question is are you going to send in your application before May 5?
#omoheKOH#wealthandimpactsummit26
Your virtual card just got upGREYded🥳
Welcome to a new era of smoother, faster, and more flexible card payments.
Tap the link below to read more👇 #VirtualCards#SpendWithGrey
Funny how everyone wants a piece of the Nigerian market now.
Some of us remember the brands that were here when it was "too risky’ to provide Nigerians with USD accounts. Grey has my loyalty for life
In August 2013, I emailed the @PayPal team. Nigeria’s fintech ecosystem was still young. @Paga was just a few years old. And the “Africa opportunity” wasn’t yet part of most global boardroom conversations. But even then, the opportunity was clear to us. In that email, I shared a simple belief: that Nigeria would become one of the most important economies in the world, and that there was strong alignment between PayPal and Paga to make payments, financial services, and global commerce work for Nigerians. I attached a presentation outlining how our two companies might collaborate: Paga could power on-ramps and off-ramps to and from PayPal in Nigeria. The partnership would enable Nigerians to use PayPal anywhere PayPal is accepted globally. It would also enable Nigerian merchants to accept PayPal for payments.
It would take more than a decade for that belief to fully materialize.
Today, I’m proud to share that PayPal is now live in Nigeria through Paga.
Until now, Nigerians could not receive money via PayPal. Our partnership unlocks that. Nigerian PayPal users who link their PayPal accounts to Paga can now receive money via PayPal. Only PayPal Nigeria accounts linked to Paga are enabled for receiving money.
Gig workers can now get paid through PayPal, and family members can now send you money on PayPal. Nigerian merchants can now receive payments on PayPal. The linkage is done within the Paga app, and users can view their PayPal balance and withdraw to Naira when they want. Nigerians can now use PayPal at over 30 million merchants worldwide!
This moment isn’t about a single announcement. It’s about patience. It’s about building robust, trusted local infrastructure. It’s about believing that global platforms scale better when they work with local systems, not around them. Partnerships like this don’t happen overnight. They are the result of years of conversations, trust-building, regulatory work, and showing up consistently. I’m proud of the Paga team for staying the course. I’m grateful to the PayPal team for believing in the long-term vision. And I’m excited about what this unlocks for Nigerians participating in the global digital economy.
Download the Paga app, link your PayPal to Paga, and connect with global commerce today!
Omo, credit where it’s due, Dapo Abiodun has been delivering on road projects across Ogun State. I just saw he commissioned a new road in Afon town yesterday.
Now I’m just waiting for the one that will locate my doorstep 😂
#GovDAPO
Some women have audacity. She said she's attracted to married men and she has been with a married man for years while he was with his situationship 😭
Girl you're the situationship fgs😭. Love how Kittie addressed this. She was so on point 💯💯💯